A Look At Google’s Massive Library Of Free Lesson Plans

Did you know that Google offers a sortable library of lesson plans that are free to download and use? It’s part of the company’s big push into education (seems to be quite the trend these days) and involves thousands of free lesson plans just waiting for you to try out.

Most incorporate Google products but then again so do most high-tech lesson plans these days. You can sort the listings by the type of Google product you want or, if that’s not your cup of tea, view the plans organized by subject. That’s probably the best way to go for most Edudemic readers.

Ways To Sort

By Google Product

Apps

Apps+

Apps & Earth

Blogger

Computer Science 4 High School

Digital Literacy

Docs / Drive

Exploring Comp Thinking

Fusion Tables

Google Earth

Google Lit Trips

Multiple

Science Fair

Search

Sites

Sketchup

YouTube

By Subject

Fine Arts

Social Studies

Language Arts

Science

Math

Computer Science

Research

Physics

Computer Design

History – Social Sciences

By Age

Ages 0-6

Ages 7-12

Ages 13-18

Ages 15-18

Sample Lesson Plans

Great Moments in Art

Great Moments in Art is an event calendar that uses Google Calendar to create a calendar of artist birthdays and other moments in art history and link those events to a geographic location. Students may visit any museum website and select an artist or art event to research.

Computational Representation of Ants Foraging

A computer program can represent interesting aspects of how ants find and collect food. By exploring variations on the program one can explore such matters as how the nature of the food supply affects how long the ants’ trail pheromone, a chemical used to help locate food sources, should last. The example illustrates how computational thinking patterns are useful in modelling real-world phenomena.

Outbreak

As the world confronts global health problems such as epidemics or pandemics, involve your students in an authentic lesson that will increase their understanding of health related issues and give them the tools to make informed decisions about their own health and the health of their schools and communities.

Explore Some More

The lesson plans all open up in Google Docs / Drive, naturally. That may be a bit of a pain for some but not a dealbreaker for many. So if you’re hunting around for handy lesson plans free of charge that leverage the products from the omnipresent Google, this site is worth checking out!